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Tutors in Croydon South include a fully registered English and maths teacher with decades of classroom and tutoring expertise, VCE high achievers (ATARs up to 96.85) and subject award winners, a specialist in K–12 education currently studying teaching, published authors, youth coaches, peer mentors, and competition-tested science and maths leaders.

Lindsay
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Lindsay

Economics Tutor Mitcham, VIC
I belive helping to build confidence is the most important thing an economics tutor can do for a student. Confidence in one area can flow into other areas of study/life. A positive and supportive tutor can have influence on a students life in future years of study and life. Patience, understanding, positive attitude, growth mindset,…
Joe
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Joe

Economics Tutor Wantirna, VIC
Good preparation before tutorials is essential. We also need to Know the students' ability and level of understaniding on the subjects, so that good explanations can be provided them. Besides, a little quizzes, drills and exercises may help student to be familiar to the subjects. I am patient to student. And I am eager to explain different…
1st Lesson Trial

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Sahib
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Sahib

Economics Tutor Ferntree Gully, VIC
I believe the key purpose of an economics tutor is not only to improve a students grades but also encourage intellectual curiosity. Due to the individuality of each student a personalised experience must be created by tutors, through adapting teaching methods and lesson plans, to stimulate the unique minds of students. Further tutors must…
James
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James

Economics Tutor Vermont South, VIC
Increasing a student's grade or helping them understand a single concept are just some of the things that most people look for in an economics tutor. While these are undoubtedly worthwhile indicators of a tutor's ability to teach a student, they are often mercurial and temporary once the tutoring stops. I firmly believe that what differentiates a…
Rhea
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Rhea

Economics Tutor Vermont South, VIC
I think one of the most important things an economics tutor can do is help students believe in themselves. Sometimes they know more than they think—they just need someone to encourage them and show them they’re capable. And remind students that learning is a process. A tutor should focus on progress, not perfection, and celebrate the small…
Kishan
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Kishan

Economics Tutor Heathmont, VIC
1. Patience with the student. 2. Flexibility with methods of teaching to adapt to the student. 3. Using all the available resources to make sure the student understands best. 4. Being a good listener by not dominating the conversation and listening to understand the student. I make an attempt to adapt myself to every case. There is no one way…
Klara
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Klara

Economics Tutor Mooroolbark, VIC
I think the most important thing is that the tutor and the student have a relationship in which the student is able to express their concerns and needs. This allows the tutor to individualise the study experience, to most benefit the client! I am positive and motivating. I know tutoring can be confronting and stressful at times and I would like to…
Goutham
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Goutham

Economics Tutor Vermont, VIC
I think that the tutor acts as a mentor for the student. In this role, the tutor should encourage the students to think critically in order to find answers to their questions. By providing the means to discover the answers for themselves, the tutor ensures that the student does not merely address the 'what' of the question but is also able to…
Ishita
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Ishita

Economics Tutor Ferntree Gully, VIC
The most important thing an economics tutor can do for a student is to guide them instead of doing the work for them. It is important for the students to feel that they have control over what they are learning and for them to be encouraged through feedback and practice. I am a very patient, determined and creative person. I can understand what a…
Mitch
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Mitch

Economics Tutor Donvale, VIC
To encourage them to persevere even when they find their studies difficult. My opinion is that equipping them with the knowledge they need is only a small part of the job. I also believe it is important to encourage them and support them to allow them to succeed despite the pressures of school and the environment they may find themselves in. My…
Bo
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Bo

Economics Tutor Donvale, VIC
Help them understand something. Adapt to students; builds rapport; knowing how to learn efficiently in my own…
Nathan
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Nathan

Economics Tutor Vermont South, VIC
I consider guidance as the most important thing an economics tutor can do for a student. Teachers are important but sometimes they can be carried away by teaching a large group of students in the class. Tutors are there to give personal support to the students to help not just their academic development and also emotionally What most teachers…
Edward
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Edward

Economics Tutor Vermont South, VIC
I firmly believe the most important thing an economics tutor can do for a student is to personalise their learning experience. Every student is different and learns in their own way, being able to adapt to each student is what differentiates a good tutor from an amazing tutor. I think my strengths as a tutor is being able to find the best method…
Qijia
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Qijia

Economics Tutor Knoxfield, VIC
I believe the most important thing for a tutor to do is to cultivate the interest and engagement of the students. In Chinese, there is an idiom that roughly translates to "Interest is the best teacher", by actively engaging the interests of students you make learning not a chore, but rather a joy. I believe that my biggest strength lies in my…
Hamzah
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Hamzah

Economics Tutor Doncaster East, VIC
The main thing is being able to effectively explain a topic or clear students' doubts. If the student is able to explain the topic to others, I believe that is a good indication of their understanding and shows that a tutor has successfully explained a topic or cleared doubts. My main strengths are that I am patient and eager to learn myself. If I…

Local Reviews

Yes we are very happy, Kane is away this week but we will be continuing through the school holidays.
Jeni, Croydon

Inside Croydon SouthTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 10 student Gabriella focused on factorising and solving quadratic equations, as well as revising linear equations and exploring turning point form in preparation for upcoming assessments.

For Year 8, Ava worked through fraction operations and tackled problems involving positive and negative integers using written steps to clarify each part of her process.

Meanwhile, Year 11 student Gabby spent recent sessions reviewing differentiation basics and practising methods such as the quotient rule and product rule with targeted exercises from class materials.

Recent Challenges

In Year 8 maths, a student's working out was often messy or unclear—especially when labeling shapes or setting out steps in algebra—which made it hard to check answers or spot errors (tidying up working out so that silly mistakes aren't made).

During a Year 10 creative writing task, another hesitated to expand on ideas and preferred "telling" over showing, limiting depth in essays.

A senior Chemistry student missed early classes and struggled to keep up with current content; gaps grew because she avoided revisiting foundational material.

Forgotten homework also delayed progress for a Year 9 student in Croydon South.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Croydon South noticed Gabby, a Year 10 student, move from hesitating over factorising quadratics to confidently using the grouping method on her own—something she found confusing just a few weeks ago.

In another session, Sebastian in Year 11, who once struggled to generate ideas for English tasks, was able to brainstorm creative themes independently for his SAC protest piece without prompting and even suggested new vocabulary options independently.

Meanwhile, Ava in Year 4 started double-checking her answers for mistakes rather than rushing through maths problems; she finished her worksheet today with every answer self-checked.

Local Spots for Tutoring

If you'd prefer not to have lessons at home, tutoring can also take place at a local library—such as Croydon Library—or at your child's school (with permission), like Tinternvale Primary School.